时间:2018-12-04 作者:英语课 分类:新编大学英语教程


英语课


Unit 9

DIALOGUE I

If I Had the Chance to Travel in Space

A: If I had the chance, I would take a trip through the entire solar system. It's been my long-cherished dream since childhood to be able to visit the planets, satellites, comets, and other heavenly bodies in the solar system.
B: I've had the same wild dream for years. If I had the chance, I would first go to the moon, the earth's satellite. Then when I looked back, the earth would look like a big moon hanging in the sky.
A: You wouldn't be the first person to land on the moon, would you?
B: No, but that wouldn't matter. Although I could not leave my "name" there, I would certainly leave my footprints on the moon, anyway.
A: If I had the chance, my first stop would be Venus. It's the brightest planet in the solar system and the one that comes closest to the earth. If I were able to make the trip, I would not only leave my footprints but also our national flag on Venus.
B: You'd better do it now, or this planet will be occupied by creatures from outer space and you won't be allowed to leave even your footprints of fingerprints 1 there.
A: If that should happen, we would live in peace and harmony with outer space creatures. Anyway, Venus is not so far away from the earth and it has no moon. I think it would be strange to see no moon it the sky at night.
B: But you don't see the moon every day from the earth anyway, do you? In my case, I would travel to Jupiter after my trip to the moon. You know Jupiter has eleven moons. Can you imagine seeing eleven moons in the sky at the same time? What a strange sight it would be!
A: Oh, I would go farther than you. Saturn 2 has nine moons and beautiful rings around it, too. Wouldn't that be a rarer sight to see than a mere 3 cluster of eleven moons?
B: Both planets are worth seeing, actually. Let's count in both Jupiter and Saturn on our itinerary 4. But I will definitely spare Uranus 5, Neptune 6 and Pluto 7 in my schedule. They are too far away from the earth. Besides, too little is known about them.
A: We'd certainly go to Mars, wouldn't we? It's closer to the earth and better known. I'd go there and explore its canals; and if I were lucky enough, I might meet a couple of Martians.
B: The Martians? I wonder if there are living creatures there. Where else in space could we go?
A: Mercury. Don't forget Mercury. I would be able to break the world's records in the high jump on Mercury and make a name in history. You know, the gravity there is only about a third as strong as it is on the earth.
B: Really. It's very ambitious of us to come up with the idea of touring around the solar system, I wonder if it will happen in three hundred years.


DIALOGUE II

Dialogue:
A: Hello, Bob.
B: Hello, Richard. How are you?
A: Fine, thanks, and you?
B: Not too bad. I'm thinking of going on holiday somewhere next month. I don't know if you've made your holiday plans yet, but if not, perhaps you'd like to come with me.
A: Thanks, that's very kind of you. Where are you planning to go?
B: I thought I might go camping in Scotland. What do you think of that?
A: Fine. Sounds like a good idea. And for how long — a fortnight?
B: Yes. I'm hoping to have two weeks' holiday next month.
A: Good. Well, providing I finish all my work on time, I'll be able to have two weeks' holiday, too.
B: Will Joyce be coming with us?
A: I'm not sure. Maybe. The problem is that she always gets one week's holiday, and of course she can't really afford a holiday this year.
B: Oh, dear! That's a pity! Well, the holiday shouldn't cost very much.
A: Supposing you had a lot of money, Bob, where would you like to go for a holiday?
B: Oh, I don't know. I think I would probably go to America or Japan.
A: If I had a lot of money, and 4 weeks' holiday I would go to Asia, I think, and travel.
B: Yes, that would be fantastic. Anyway, stop dreaming. We're going to Scotland and I hope it doesn't rain.

READING I

How Far Is the Sun from the Earth?

How far is the sun from the earth? This is a question you might have asked yourself ever since you began asking about anything. In fact, for thousands of years astronomers 8 had been asking the same question. But they had no way of getting an accurate answer because the sun was so far, far away. Now with the use of the radio telescope, they are able to give a very accurate answer: the sun is 92,956,000 miles away from the earth.
Can you imagine how far away that is?
The jet airliner 9 today travels at a speed of 700 miles an hour. Imagine that you were flying to the sun in this airliner. You could make no stops for rest, nor for gas or oil, because there would be no place for you to stop. You would fly day and night at such a speed. Yet by the time you arrived, fifteen years would have passed.
The electric train can travel as fast as 110 miles an hour. If a railway could be built on a sunbeam, it would take the train nearly 100 years to reach the sun. You would get very, very tired even if you lived long enough to finish the journey.
The aircraft carrier is one of the fastest warships 10, having a speed of about forty miles per hour. If the ship could sail through space, it would take more than 200 years for her to get to the sun. A little over two hundred years ago America won her independence from Britain. Suppose someone had set off to the sun in this ship when George Washington became President of the United States. Now after traveling all these years, he would still have a long journey before him.
Suppose you lived with your parents in New York and you wanted to visit your grandmother in Philadelphia. You would be on the train for nearly an hour and a half. If you took a million trips to your grandmother's, you would have traveled as far as from the earth to the sun.
What a long way it is to the sun! Have you ever thought that the sun was as far away from us as that?



1 fingerprints
n.指纹( fingerprint的名词复数 )v.指纹( fingerprint的第三人称单数 )
  • Everyone's fingerprints are unique. 每个人的指纹都是独一无二的。
  • They wore gloves so as not to leave any fingerprints behind (them). 他们戴着手套,以免留下指纹。 来自《简明英汉词典》
2 Saturn
n.农神,土星
  • Astronomers used to ask why only Saturn has rings.天文学家们过去一直感到奇怪,为什么只有土星有光环。
  • These comparisons suggested that Saturn is made of lighter materials.这些比较告诉我们,土星由较轻的物质构成。
3 mere
adj.纯粹的;仅仅,只不过
  • That is a mere repetition of what you said before.那不过是重复了你以前讲的话。
  • It's a mere waste of time waiting any longer.再等下去纯粹是浪费时间。
4 itinerary
n.行程表,旅行路线;旅行计划
  • The two sides have agreed on the itinerary of the visit.双方商定了访问日程。
  • The next place on our itinerary was Silistra.我们行程的下一站是锡利斯特拉。
5 Uranus
n.天王星
  • Uranus is unusual because it is tilted.天王星非常特殊,因为它是倾斜的。
  • Uranus represents sudden change and rebellion.天王星代表突然性的改变和反叛。
6 Neptune
n.海王星
  • Neptune is the furthest planet from the sun.海王星是离太阳最远的行星。
  • Neptune turned out to be a dynamic,stormy world.海王星原来是个有生气、多风暴的世界。
7 Pluto
n.冥王星
  • Pluto is the furthest planet from the sun.冥王星是离太阳最远的行星。
  • Pluto has an elliptic orbit.冥王星的轨道是椭圆形的。
8 astronomers
n.天文学者,天文学家( astronomer的名词复数 )
  • Astronomers can accurately foretell the date,time,and length of future eclipses. 天文学家能精确地预告未来日食月食的日期、时刻和时长。 来自《简明英汉词典》
  • Astronomers used to ask why only Saturn has rings. 天文学家们过去一直感到奇怪,为什么只有土星有光环。 来自《简明英汉词典》
9 airliner
n.客机,班机
  • The pilot landed the airliner safely.驾驶员使客机安全着陆。
  • The passengers were shepherded across the tarmac to the airliner.旅客们被引导走过跑道去上飞机。
10 warships
军舰,战舰( warship的名词复数 ); 舰只
  • The enemy warships were disengaged from the battle after suffering heavy casualties. 在遭受惨重伤亡后,敌舰退出了海战。
  • The government fitted out warships and sailors for them. 政府给他们配备了战舰和水手。
学英语单词
achronism
after length
angustifolius
arched harps
Asan R.
batse
brain mucosa forceps
brake fade
bubble flow visual ization
cesium sesquioxide
chemosensitiver
chinny
climbing roll
CNBU
coarse balancing
coast redwood
con-agra
cow trainer
customer relationship management analytics
Dasein
deerfold
drag structure
electrical micrometer tube
electro-hydraulic servo valve
emanative
endepidermis
erosions-implantate
euzkadi
exotic mantle materials
FBPSS
felt-cloth
fermenting
filter paper holder
fluid catalytic cracking
FMEL
Foot Dragons
forging and pressing
fork-up
fourth trochanter
fragile cartridge case
full-time professor
German East Africa
Green Pt.
gully trap
hakodates
have a an accommodating memory
have a cylinder missing
hedge trees
high-frequency electrically heated mold
hind-quarters
homologically trivial
Iles Marquises
involuntary striated muscle
iridoprocne bicolors
Iwimbi
jetonised wood
kampschror
kicked arse
Komuniga
leakage magnetic flux
left-hand system
ligand field
Limoges painted enamel
liver extract concentrated capsule
lowland burrowing treefrog
methodology in computer graphics
minkies
multi-functional drilling and tap holder
netted chainfern
noise protection
oaktown
Panamanian flag
perspectivization
piston ring pin
poltrack
pond weed
power-house superstructure
quintessentiality
radar coverage indicator
random disturbance
Roslev
sampling distribution
sexdecillion
soil rent
South Slocan
spiculate spike
syntomycin palmitate
talking-drummers
Tan Binh
tapered feed wheel
taxonomies of educational objectives
Thubten
tuberculosis of knee joint
two-course range
wagon works
wave generating area
We don't kill a pig every day.
working majority
write sth into sth
yeltons
zacco platypus
zero phase current transformer